Microsoft .net dev tools CTP released
The project codenamed "Orcas" is now available for download. The developer tools release is Microsoft's September customer technology preview (CTP) for the .net framework 3.0. You must have the .net framework and September CTP software development kit (SDK), not to mention a non-express version of Visual Studio 2005 already installed to run the tools in this release. At under 4MB (not quite a ...
Apparently there was a little chatter around the blogosphere lately about how Google supports click fraud. Well, then business product manager for trust and security over at Google cleared some things up on Google's corporate blog. Shurman Ghosemajumder, the business product manager for trust and security at Google spoke up about the issue at hand, and stated that a blogger quoted Eric Schmidt a ...
While I'm not nearly convinced by the claim that Empressr is "the first web-based application that lets you create, share and store presentations online" (did it come before Thumbstacks?), it does indeed let you do that, and does it pretty well. It's a Flash-based app, which makes it smooth and responsive, and has most of the features you need to make basic presentations. PowerPoint users will ...
This is a very simple application for
making very simple presentations. Seriously, it's a simple tool. Don't go making anything crazy with it. Powerbullet Presenter just makes simple SWF files with bulleted presentations in
it. You can make gradients, insert text, and some pics, but that's about it. The great part is, it's free, and will
pretty much do a lot of the heavy lifting for you. The bad ...
Who needs GUIs to create
presentations? Not you, if you have Pylize. At least, that's
the premise. Pylize is an app written in Python that will take a bit of HTML written by you and turn it into a
PowerPoint-style presentation that can be viewed in any web browser. You define your presentation's slides and content
in an HTML file, add a bit of style using its built-in CSS classes (or your own), ...
Flash is wonderful, Flash is good, not everyone uses it, but everyone should. And if you can't afford Flash I found a little app that lets you create presentations that turn into those nifty little SWF's. It's called Wink, by the good folks over at DebugMode. I've seen it used on several sites to demonstrate software. Not only does it grab screenshots (complete with cursor movement), you can also ...





